Grade

Type of questions

Contemporary sociology Senior High

公共の宿題なのですが、最近のニュースが難しくあまり理解出来ていません。 少しでもわかる方教えていただけると嬉しいです

10. 次のトランプ氏の発言を読んで、 トランプ氏はなぜこのような関税をかけたのか考えよう。 そして、 トランプ氏の立場になって、 その理由を説明してください。 「長年、働き者の米国市民は他の国が豊かになっていくのを傍観するのを強いられていたが、今度は我々 が繋栄する番だ」 11. この関税に反発する中国は先週、アメリカに対する報復措置として、米国からの全ての輸入品に同率の 34% の追加関税を課すと発表。 するとトランプ氏は、「それならさらに50%を上乗せだ」 と、 中国に 対し計 84% の追加関税を発動。 お互い譲らない米中の報復関税合戦により、 11日には、アメリカの 中国に対する追加関税は125%という前代未聞の税率になった。 別枠でかけたものと合わせると、中 国への追加関税は145%と異常な数字となった。 途中まで中国商務省は 「圧力には屈しない。 最後ま でお付き合いする」 と徹底抗戦の構えだったが、アメリカへの報復としての追加関税を125%まで引 き上げた後、「今後はアメリカが対中関税をさらに引き上げても中国は相手にしない」 と報復関税の打ち 止めも宣言した。 米中両国とも初めから話し合いをする意思は表明しているので、今後のトランプ氏の 出方が注目される。 一方、アメリカが9日に発動 適用した約60か国・地域に対する個別の相互関税 (日本は24%) については発動後すぐ、 最低税率10%は残すが90日間停止すると発表している。 さて、関税はその分だけ輸入品の価格を上昇させるので、貿易活動の活発化にとってはマイナスな要 素です。 今回のアメリカによる世界中の国に対する相互関税化は、世界経済貿易に大きなマイナス不 安を与えており、 世界経済が失速する危険が一段と高まっていると言われています。 あなたは今回の一連のトランプ関税 (相互関税) についてどう思いますか。 あなたの考え思うとこ ろを書いてください。

Solved Answers: 1
English Senior High

「But reading isn’t just a nice thing to do – it’s an essential skill,something you need for everyday activities, whether that’s finding o... Read More

Phil Hello. This is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English. I'm Phil. Beth And I'm Beth. Are you a big reader, Phil? Phil Sure, I enjoy reading - and it's also a great way to pass the time on my daily commute to work. But reading isn't just a nice thing to do - it's an essential skill, something you need for everyday activities, whether that's finding out the news by reading a newspaper or buying groceries by reading the labels. Beth And that's why I was shocked by a recent UN report estimating that around the world over 700 million adults are illiterate, which means they can't read or write. Phil Wow! That's a huge number of people excluded from doing basic day-to-day things. So, what can be done to get more adults reading and writing? In this programme, we'll be hearing about projects in two very different countries trying to do just that. And, as usual, we'll be learning some useful new vocabulary as well. Beth But first I have a question for you, Phil. I mentioned a recent UN report on the high numbers of people unable to read and write, but illiteracy is not a new problem. Since 1967, the UN has been highlighting the importance of literacy, being able to read and write, with a day of celebration called International Literacy Day. But when does it take place? Is it: a) the 8th of March? b) the 8th of June? or, c) the 8th of September? Phil I think International Literacy Day is on the 8th of September. Beth OK, Phil, we'll find out if that's correct at the end of the programme. The biggest reason people grow up illiterate is not going to school, and that's especially true for people living in the coastal towns of Bangladesh. Because these towns flood regularly, families are always on the move, making it hard for children to get an education. Phil The Friendship Project teaches reading and writing to groups of Bangladeshi women and girls. They also teach numeracy which means the ability to do basic maths like counting and adding up. Here one student, Rashida, explains the impact it's had on her to BBC World Service programme, People Fixing The World: Rashida My parents never sent me to school and I've suffered from not being able to read and write. My children were embarrassed that I was illiterate. I couldn't even do basic accounting. Until now, I've had to use my fingerprint as a signature as I was illiterate, but now I can sign my name because I can read and write thealphabet, and I'll also be able to keep an account of my expenses. No one can cheat me anymore. Beth Before the Friendship Project, Rashida couldn't write her signature – her name written in her own handwriting. Instead, she had to use her fingerprint. Now, Rashida has learned the alphabet and also some basic maths, so she knows how much money she's spent, and how much she has left. This means no-one can cheat her, can trick or swindle her into taking her money.

Solved Answers: 1
English Senior High

it’s an essential skill, something you need for everyday activities, whether that’s finding out the news by reading a newspaper or buying... Read More

Phil Hello. This is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English. I'm Phil. Beth And I'm Beth. Are you a big reader, Phil? Phil Sure, I enjoy reading - and it's also a great way to pass the time on my daily commute to work. But reading isn't just a nice thing to do - it's an essential skill, something you need for everyday activities, whether that's finding out the news by reading a newspaper or buying groceries by reading the labels. Beth And that's why I was shocked by a recent UN report estimating that around the world over 700 million adults are illiterate, which means they can't read or write. Phil Wow! That's a huge number of people excluded from doing basic day-to-day things. So, what can be done to get more adults reading and writing? In this programme, we'll be hearing about projects in two very different countries trying to do just that. And, as usual, we'll be learning some useful new vocabulary as well. Beth But first I have a question for you, Phil. I mentioned a recent UN report on the high numbers of people unable to read and write, but illiteracy is not a new problem. Since 1967, the UN has been highlighting the importance of literacy, being able to read and write, with a day of celebration called International Literacy Day. But when does it take place? Is it: a) the 8th of March? b) the 8th of June? or, c) the 8th of September? Phil I think International Literacy Day is on the 8th of September. Beth OK, Phil, we'll find out if that's correct at the end of the programme. The biggest reason people grow up illiterate is not going to school, and that's especially true for people living in the coastal towns of Bangladesh. Because these towns flood regularly, families are always on the move, making it hard for children to get an education. Phil The Friendship Project teaches reading and writing to groups of Bangladeshi women and girls. They also teach numeracy which means the ability to do basic maths like counting and adding up. Here one student, Rashida, explains the impact it's had on her to BBC World Service programme, People Fixing The World: Rashida My parents never sent me to school and I've suffered from not being able to read and write. My children were embarrassed that I was illiterate. I couldn't even do basic accounting. Until now, I've had to use my fingerprint as a signature as I was illiterate, but now I can sign my name because I can read and write thealphabet, and I'll also be able to keep an account of my expenses. No one can cheat me anymore. Beth Before the Friendship Project, Rashida couldn't write her signature - her name written in her own handwriting. Instead, she had to use her fingerprint. Now, Rashida has learned the alphabet and also some basic maths, so she knows how much money she's spent, and how much she has left. This means no-one can cheat her, can trick or swindle her into taking her money.

Solved Answers: 1
English Senior High

派生語のところを教えてほしいです!! 同お願いします🙏

Lesson 3 We Can Make a Difference |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| 発音 Part 1 名石炭 形 再生可能な ✓ 名源 変化を起こす 中学 英語 |英→日 日本語 日→英 派生語など 1 extremely [ikstrí:mli] <副極めて 2 increase [inkrí:s] ▼ 増える 3 frequent [frí:kwant] ▼形 頻繁な 形 極度の )減る ) 副頻繁に 4 harbor [há:rbor] ✓ 名港 5 generate [dzénarèrt] 動をつくり出す 6 electricity [lektrísati] 7coal [kóul] 8 renewable [run (j)úabal] 9 source [só:rs] 熟 make a difference ✓ 名電気 A =(p ) ≒(p ) 形 電気の coal( 炭坑 ste source エネルギー源 熟 the number of A V Aの数 熟 right in front of A ✓ Aのすぐ前に (j 熟 very few of A V Aはほとんどない Part 2 英語 3 impact [ímpækt] 中学 1 peaceful [pí:sfl] 2 coral reef [k5(:)ral rí:f] ✓ 名影響 英→日 日本語 英 ✓ 形 平穏な ✓名 サンゴ礁 ▼動を脅かす 4 threaten [Orétan] 5 ecosystem [ékousistom] 6 typhoon [tarfú:n] ▼名 生態系 ✓名 台風 7 community [kamjú:niti] 名 地域社会 他の意味 共同体 va 8 poverty [pá:varti] ✓ 名 貧困 )< D Vimpact of ( ) in front of A Jpimby nisaameb )名平和や やすらぎ change 気候変動の影響 ecosystem 海の生態系 派生語など 名脅威 9 livelihood [lárvlihùd] ✓名 生計 10 affect [ofékt] 熟 at times 熟 blow away A 熟 suffer from A ✓動に影響するJJJ ときどき VAを吹き飛ばす VAに悩まされる 「うれしそうに V = (s el) 形貧しいSW [es] drgaside [ledaredaldinod V2)quod nove ayaw quem ni

Solved Answers: 1
English Senior High

7行目の文の文構造教えて欲しいです🙏

25 The Maya loved cacao so much they used the beans as currency. They also believed it is good for you which many people still say today about cacao's most famous byproduct, chocolate. 物 In fact, cacao, also called cocoa, which is the not-so-secret ingredient of chocolate, s contains hundreds of bioactive* plant compounds, including flavanols*, which have with numerous possible health benefits. been (あ "Research on the bioactive components of the cacao bean pretty consistently shows that if you're consuming greater amounts of flavanols you see mechanisms (linked to heart disease are, by and large, favorably impacted," says Howard Sesso, an 10 epidemiologist at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Brigham and Women's Hospital. This includes improvements in blood pressure and cholesterol levels. But while cacao does have intriguing potential to boost heart health and brain function, no science supports eating large amounts of chocolate as a health food 15 sorry chocoholics. Here's why. - Spurred by chocolate's popularity, numerous studies have explored how the natural chemical compounds found in cocoa might be good for human health. While some have suggested that less than an ounce of dark chocolate might 本単位 VT improve heart health, much of the research doesn't involve eating actual chocolate not A but rather BAというよりむしろB 20 but rather its components. In 2022, (2) Sesso and colleagues found compelling evidence for the benefits of 説得力のある flavanols. In a clinical trial of 21,000 adults, they found that the half of the group that took 500mg of cocoa flavanol supplements daily had a significantly lower risk of death from cardiovascular disease* than those who had taken a placebo. Flavanols may also boost insulin sensitivity, according to some studies, which might be helpful in reducing the risk of type 2 diabetes. But the results aren't conclusive, and those at risk of diabetes might be () (to choose a cacao-inspired

Waiting Answers: 1
English Senior High

この英文の文法を教えて欲しいです。 (関係代名詞、不定詞など) 英語が苦手なのでどのような使い方をするのかなど教えてもらえるとありがたいです。

onference ánf(a)rans] im [éim] articipant artisǝpǝnt] sappointment isapintment] opose [prǝpouz] allenging elindsin] me to do mto do on one's appointment ... at all stantial stanf(ǝ)!] road [réilroud] instream instri:m] t is how ... e hope that... an impact on 3 In How did they come to publish their own paper? 2002, there was a study conference held by CHETNA an NGO that aims to help the children in slums. Among the participants, there were some children from a slum in South Delhi. They were shocked to learn that adults had no idea about what really goes on in a slum! To their disappointment, the children also learned that the media did not cover the issue at all! So they decided to join a project proposed by CHETNA. It was a G1 challenging plan to start a newspaper to let people know about the terrible conditions of kids living in the slums. G1 That is how Balaknama started. The children chose this name in the hope that their paper would serve as "the voice of children." In fact, their articles have sometimes had a substantial impact on society. In 15 2015, a shocking article appeared in Balaknama. It was about slum kids forced by police officers to remove bodies after railroad accidents. The mainstream media reported on the article and the government finally acted and stopped the police. 20 nsion Check id the children learn at a study conference held by CHETNA? roject did CHETNA propose? d the children name the newspaper Balaknama?

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